JMIR Medical Education

Technology, innovation, and openness in medical education in the information age.

Editor-in-Chief:

Blake J. Lesselroth, MD MBI FACP FAMIA, University of Oklahoma | OU-Tulsa Schusterman Center; University of Victoria, British Columbia


Impact Factor 3.2 CiteScore 6.9

JMIR Medical Education (JME, ISSN 2369-3762) is an open access, PubMed-indexed, peer-reviewed journal focusing on technology, innovation, and openness in medical education.This includes e-learning and virtual training, which has gained critical relevance in the (post-)COVID world. Another focus is on how to train health professionals to use digital tools. We publish original research, reviews, viewpoint, and policy papers on innovation and technology in medical education. As an open access journal, we have a special interest in open and free tools and digital learning objects for medical education and urge authors to make their tools and learning objects freely available (we may also publish them as a Multimedia Appendix). We also invite submissions of non-conventional articles (e.g., open medical education material and software resources that are not yet evaluated but free for others to use/implement). 

In our "Students' Corner," we invite students and trainees from various health professions to submit short essays and viewpoints on all aspects of medical education, particularly suggestions on improving medical education and suggestions for new technologies, applications, and approaches. 

In 2024, JMIR Medical Education received a Journal Impact Factor™ of 3.2 (Source: Journal Citation Reports™ from Clarivate, 2024). The journal is indexed in MEDLINEPubMed, PubMed Central, Scopus, DOAJ, and the Emerging Sources Citation Index (Clarivate)JMIR Medical Education received a CiteScore of 6.9, placing it in the 91st percentile (#137 of 1543) as a Q1 journal in the field of Education.

Recent Articles

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Letters to the Editor

Large language models (LLMs) have demonstrated significant potential in academic research but face challenges in generating accurate citations. The issue of hallucinated references—well-formatted but fictitious citations—arises due to LLMs' limited access to subscription-based databases and their reliance on probabilistic text generation. This letter discusses two key approaches to mitigating these issues. First, retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) combined with Hallucination Aware Tuning (HAT) improves citation integrity by integrating external databases and employing hallucination detection models. However, even RAG-HAT systems may still misinterpret source content. Second, we propose the development of “Reference-Accurate” Academic LLMs by major global publishers, which would be trained exclusively on rigorously verified academic literature, ensuring that all citations generated are authentic and traceable. We recommend a dual approach integrating RAG-HAT with publisher-backed academic LLMs, along with human oversight, to enhance AI-assisted scholarly communication. Future research should evaluate the accuracy and reliability of these methods to promote responsible AI use in academia.

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Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality in Medical Education

The use of extended reality (XR) technologies in health care can potentially address some of the significant resource and time constraints related to delivering training for health care professionals. While substantial progress in realizing this potential has been made across several domains, including surgery, anatomy, and rehabilitation, the implementation of XR in mental health training, where nuanced humanistic interactions are central, has lagged.

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Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality in Medical Education

Virtual Reality (VR) has emerged as a promising tool in medical education, particularly for fostering critical skills such as empathy. However, how VR, combined with perspective-taking, influences affective empathy in nursing education remains underexplored.

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Student/Learners Perceptions and Experiences with Educational Technology

English for Medical Purposes (EMP) is essential for medical students as it serves as a foundational language for medical communication and education. However, students often undervalue its importance within the medical curriculum. Given their demanding schedules and workload, educational methods for EMP must align with their needs. Structured online learning offers flexibility and convenience, yet limited research has explored its exclusive application for EMP in undergraduate medical education.

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Simulation

With the increasing recognition of the importance of simulation-based teaching in medical education, research in this field has developed rapidly. To comprehensively understand the research dynamics and trends in this area, we conducted an analysis of knowledge mapping and global trends.

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Social Media in Medical Education

Social media has become an integral part of many medical students’ lives, blurring the lines between their personal and professional identities as many aspects of their medical careers appear online. Physicians must understand how to responsibly navigate these sites.

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Graduate and Postgraduate Education for Health Professionals

The Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT-4) is a large language model (LLM) trained and fine-tuned on an extensive dataset. After the public release of its predecessor in November 2022, the use of LLMs has seen a significant spike in interest, and a multitude of potential use cases have been proposed. In parallel, however, important limitations have been outlined. Particularly, current LLM encounters limitations, especially in symbolic representation and accessing contemporary data. The recent version of GPT-4, alongside newly released plugin features, has been introduced to mitigate some of these limitations.

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Tutorials in Medical Education

Project ECHO is an innovative program that uses videoconferencing technology to connect healthcare providers with experts. The model has been successful in reaching healthcare providers in rural and underserved areas and positively impacting clinical practice. ECHO Idaho, a replication partner, has developed programming that has increased knowledge and confidence of healthcare professionals throughout the state of Idaho. Although the ECHO model has a demonstrated ability to recruit, educate, and train healthcare providers, barriers to attending Project ECHO continuing education (CE) programs remain. The asynchronous nature of podcasts could be used as an innovative medium to help address barriers to CE access that healthcare professionals face. The ECHO Idaho “Something for the Pain” podcast was developed to increase CE accessibility to rural and frontier providers, while upscaling their knowledge of and competence to treat and assess substance use disorders, pain, and behavioral health conditions.

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Medical Education

The integration of artificial intelligence (AI), notably Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer (ChatGPT), into medical education, has shown promising results in various medical fields. Nevertheless, its efficacy in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) examinations remains understudied.

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Theme Issue [2023]: Digital Health Skills and Competencies for Clinicians and Health Care Professionals

Healthcare practitioners use Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) as an aid in the crucial task of clinical reasoning and decision making. Traditional CDSS are Online Repositories (OR) and Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG). Recently, Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT have emerged as potential alternatives. They have proven to be powerful innovative tools, yet they are not devoid of worrisome risks.

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Preprints Open for Peer-Review

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